“It does now. Here,” I said, pulling out a sheaf of papers, “is a treaty between All-Risks and the government of the Philippines, signed by the President. Something for you to read… on the plane.”
“That can’t be legal,” said Murdock. “Don’t you need an act of Congress or something? Presidential order ain’t enough. I want to talk to my lawyer.”
“That won’t be possible,” said the chief of police. Pulling out another sheet of paper which he offered to Murdock, grinning when he remembered the handcuffs, he continued: “This is an order for your immediate deportation. It seems that your visa, as well as Miss Ackerman’s, has expired.”
Murdock looked like he was about to explode. Then his body relaxed and he turned to me with a glint of admiration in his eyes. “You really pulled out all the stops, eh?”
“Well, Berkshire Re did.”
“Oh, that I didn’t know.”
“You know, you’d have done better to stay at home,” I told him. “Not in San Francisco, of course.
Some other American city. With your money, your disguise and new fingerprints, just by avoiding retina scans we might never have found you. In a place where government is for sale, you can always be outbid.”
“Maybe you’re right,” he said.
“Look on the bright side. Here, the penalty for murder is death. Back home, all you have to do is pay back all the money and you’re a free man.” The prospect didn’t seem to be all that appealing to Murdock. I could sympathize: from wealth to poverty in matter of moments.
“And what about me?” asked Sophia Ackerman.
“Same thing. The presumption is you’re an accessory to murder. That was your plan, right?” I said, looking from one to the other. “You were after Ackerman’s insurance—the 110,115 gold ounces Sophia got for your murder of hubbie.”
They stared at me blankly, neither agreeing nor disagreeing.
I looked at Sophia admiringly—an easy thing to do.
“You’re a good actress,” I said. “I saw the holo.”
She spat at me, this time connecting.
“Time to go,” said Andy, looking at his watch.
“Right,” I agreed, wiping the spittle off my face. “Let’s move—we all have a plane to catch.”
THE COLONIZING OF THARLE
by James P. Hogan
Records from the colony’s founding years stated that the town of Ferrydock had grown from an early base established near the river mouth, where a motorized pontoon raft had provided the crossing to the peninsula. With its rocky prominences, dunes, and beaches, the peninsula—later named Strandside—was an attractive place for walks and swims or just lazing around to get away from the routine of the settlement for a while. Later, it acquired some stores, a bar, restaurant, and a small hotel to become one of the more popular recreation spots. Although Ferrydock was now a fair-size town, and a low, sleek bridge of concrete spans with a raisable center section— sitting on incongruously ornate steel piers reminiscent of nineteenth-century ideas of aesthetics—crossed the river, a ferry still ran alongside. Not everybody was in enough of a hurry to need the road, one of the locals had explained to Duggan and another official with the mission sent from Earth to reestablish relations with Tharle. And besides, the kids liked the water ride. Notions of cost effectiveness didn’t seem to count for much here—and that fitted with the other bizarre notions of economics that had taken root here, which the theorists up in the orbiting mother ship
Duggan stood in the square at the heart of Ferrydock’s central district—an open space really too irregular to justify its name geometrically, bordered by narrow, erratic streets and buildings of the peculiarly curved architectural style reveling in orange-brick walls and green- or blue-tiled roofs that brought back childhood memories of an illustrated edition of Oz. The Tharleans seemed to delight in turrets and towers too, which was also odd, since there was no history of militancy or defense needs to have inspired them. Simply another of their odd whims and fancies expressing itself, Duggan supposed.
It was apparently market day. The stalls around the square were heaped with assortments of unfamiliar fruits, vegetable-like offerings, and other plant forms that grew under the purple-tinted sky. There were refrigerated racks of strange fish, joints of meat, tanks of live fish, and cages containing furry and feathered animals of various kinds, whether intended for food or as pets, Duggan didn’t know. And there were tables displaying tools and other hardware, ornaments, art works, kitchenware, haberdashery, household goods, and clothing—much the same as market places anywhere, anytime. Duggan watched a tall, weathered-looking man in a gray shirt and loose blue jacket examining a pair of ceramic sculptures in the form of elongated feminine heads with a suggestion of styled Oriental features.
“How much for these?” he asked the graying-haired lady in charge of the stall. She was sitting in a folding alloy-frame chair, a many-colored, open-weave blanket pulled around her shoulders. A shaggy, yellow-haired creature with a huge-eyed, owl-like face studied the man alertly from the top of an upturned box next to her.
“Ten draks,” the woman replied.
The dialect had drifted to a degree that now sounded quaint; or was it that English as spoken on Earth had progressed? Schooling in Tharlean pronunciations, usage, and idioms had been required of all the delegates on the contact mission, and after a few days on the surface Duggan found he was experiencing few problems.
The man turned one of the sculptures over in his hands again and pursed his lips. “I’ll give you fifteen.”
The woman smiled in the kind of way that said it was a good try. “What do you think I am, destitute or dysfunctional or something? They’re not worth that.”
“Hey, come on, gimme a break and let me help you out a little. We’ve all got our pride.”
“Eleven, then.”
The man shook his head. “I can manage more than that. How about fourteen?”
They eventually settled on twelve. Duggan turned away, mystified, and shook his head. The two armed troopers that regulations required escort him when away from the surface lander at Base 1 beyond the far edge of the town looked back at him unhelpfully. “A strange way of playing poker,” Duggan commented.
“They’re all crazy,” one of the troopers offered.
Then Duggan noticed the woman in a shirt of leafy design on white and bright red shorts, standing a few yards away in front of a mixed, chattering group of people but apparently not with them. Farther back, others among the crowd had stopped and were staring at Duggan and his escorts unabashedly. The woman was perhaps in her mid thirties if Earth standards were anything to judge by, with wiry, shoulder-length hair that varied between being auburn and orange depending how it caught the light, and the bronzed skin with a hint of metallic sheen that the blue-shifted light from Xylon-B evoked among Tharleans generally. Her body was slim and lithe, her face tapering to a pointy chin, with a straight nose, dimpled cheeks, and a mouth that was hovering on the edge of wanting to smile but at the same time hesitant, as if she were unsure how it might be taken. Instead, she let her eyes interrogate him silently. They were deep, brown, intelligent, and mirthful, the kind that could arouse immediate interest in possibilities and prospects—especially in a new and strange, yet-to-be-explored place, after an excruciatingly uneventful voyage dominated by routine and officiousness. Duggan’s features softened. He let his mouth pucker in the way of one of two people unsure of their ground offering to meet halfway.
“I didn’t mean to gape,” the woman said. “But I haven’t seen anyone from the Earth ship this close before. I was just curious.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t worry about it,” Duggan answered. “I’ve seen plenty of people from Tharle. The only trouble is, I haven’t managed to talk to too many of them.”
“They’re curious too, but trying to mind their own business. It’s considered good manners…. Some of them are worried about what the soldiers are doing here, too.”
“So what makes you different?”
She shrugged. “I just wanted to see for myself what you were like—try to talk to some of you. I hear what